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An Empirical Study of Delay Jitter Management Policies D. Stone and K. Jeffay Computer Science Department University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill ACM.

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Presentation on theme: "An Empirical Study of Delay Jitter Management Policies D. Stone and K. Jeffay Computer Science Department University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill ACM."— Presentation transcript:

1 An Empirical Study of Delay Jitter Management Policies D. Stone and K. Jeffay Computer Science Department University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill ACM Multimedia Systems Volume 2, Number 6 January 1995

2 Introduction Want to support interactive audio “Last mile” is LAN (including bridges, hubs) to desktop –Study that –(Me: 1995 LANs looked a lot like today’s WANs) Transition times vary, causing gaps in playout –Can ameliorate with display queue (buffer)

3 (Frames) Display latency – time from acquisition at sender to display at receiver (gap occurs if > previous frame) End-to-end delay – time from acquisition to decompression –Varies in time (transmit + (de)compress), delay jitter Queuing delay – time from buffer to display (change size) Introduction

4 Gaps vs. Delay Can prevent gaps by having constant delay –Network reserves buffers –Ala telephone networks –But not today’s Internet Plus –will still have LAN as “last mile” –OS and (de)compress can still cause jitter Thus, tradeoff between gaps and delay must be explicitly managed by conferencing system –Change size of display queue –The larger the queuing, the larger the delay and the fewer the gaps and vice versa

5 This Paper Evaluates 3 policies for managing display queue –I-policy, E-policy from [NK92] (I is for late data ignored, E is for expand time) –Queue Monitoring from this paper Empirical study –Audioconference on a LAN –Capture traces Simulator to compute delay and gaps

6 Outline Introduction(done) The I- and E-policies (next) The Queue Monitoring policy Evaluation The Study Summary

7 The Effect of Delay Jitter If display latency worse than largest end-to- end latency, then no gaps –(When is this not what we want?) Playout with low latency and some gaps preferable to high-latency and no gaps What if a frame arrives after its playout time? Two choices: –I-Policy – single fixed latency, so discard –E-Policy – late frames always displayed, so expand playout time

8 I-Policy (Queue parameter is 2) (3 gaps, display latency of 2)

9 E-Policy (1 gap, display latency of 3 at end)

10 I-Policy (2) One event, but latency still low (e, f, g, …)

11 E-Policy (2) One event, latency higher

12 Policy Summary Display latency chosen implicitly with E-policy Choose it explicitly with I-policy What is the right display latency amount? –Depends on application Example: surgeon viewing operation vs. televised lecture –Depends on network and machines Can vary across long run So, need a policy that allows display latency to be chosen dynamically

13 Outline Introduction(done) The I- and E-policies (done) The Queue Monitoring policy (next) Evaluation The Study Summary

14 Adjusting Display Latency Audioconference with silence detection can be modeled as series of talkspurts –Sound and then silence Adjust display latency between talkspurts NK92 said observe last m fragments, discard k largest delays and choose display latency as greatest delay –Recommend m>40 and k=0.07*m (Other approaches proposed, since)

15 Monitor the Queue Measuring the end-to-end latency is difficult because needs synchronized clocks Instead, observe length of display queue over time –If end-to-end delay constant, queue size will remain the same –If end-to-end delay increases, queue shrinks –If end-to-end delay decreases, queue expands If queue length > 2 for some time, can reduce queue without (hopefully) causing a gap –“some time” is parameter, n, in frame times –Implement with counters for each of m frames in queue –If any m times > n, discard frame and reset (keep queue at least 2) –Use QM-120 as default (about 2 seconds)

16 Outline Introduction(done) The I- and E-policies (done) The Queue Monitoring policy (done) Evaluation(next) The Study Summary

17 Comparing Policies If A has lower latency and gaps than B, then better If A lower latency, but higher gaps than which is better? –Depends upon relative amounts resolution application requirements –Few standards

18 Comparing Policies Assume: –Differences in latency of 15ms or more significant –Difference in gap rate of 1 per minute significant A is better than B if either gap or latency better and the other is the same Equal if same in both dimensions Incomparable if each is better in one dimension Note, for I-policy, synchronized clocks difficult. –Instead, delay first packet for amount of time (try 2 and 3 frames in this paper)

19 Outline Introduction(done) The I- and E-policies (done) The Queue Monitoring policy (done) Evaluation (done) The Study(next) Summary

20 The Study Run videoconference –Use audio only Record end-to-end delay Input into simulator to evaluate policy

21 Videoconference Built at UNC Runs on IBM PS/2 Uses UDP IBM-Intel ActionMedia 750 –30 fps, 256x240, 8-bit color (6-8k frames) –Audio 60 fps, 128 kb/second into 16.5ms frames (266 byte packets)

22 Network 10 Mb Ethernets and 16 Mb token rings 400 Unix workstations and Macs NFS and AFS Send machine  token-ring  gateway  department ethernet  bridge  department ethernet  gateway  token-ring  display machine

23 Data Gather data for 10 minute interval 24 runs between 6am and 5pm 4 runs between midnight and 1am Record: –Acquisition times –Display times –Adjust times for clock difference and drift Input traces into simulator –Outputs average display latency –Outputs average gap rate

24 Basic Data (Comments?)

25 Two Example Runs Low jitter High jitter

26 Results QM-120 better than I-2 for all but 11 (I-2 has gap per 2 seconds vs per 11 seconds)

27 Results Better than I-3 for all but 15 Latency of QM-120 better than that of I-3 Better than E for low jitter runs

28 Summary Results If want low latency, not large gap rate  QM out-performs all I policies, E-policies

29 Threshold as a Parameter Vary thresholds for adjusting queue latency 30 frame times (.5s) 60 frame times (1s) 120 frame times (2s) 600 frame times (10s) 3600 frame times (1 min)

30 Results Comments?

31 Summary QM-600 is the best relative to QM-120 QM-120 better than all the others (Me, what about in between? Should be optimal for each setting.) Also, –QM-3600 similar to E-policy –QM-30 and QM-60 similar to I-2

32 Decay Thresholds Want to converge slowly to lowest latency Base threshold for queue length of 2 Decay factor for other queue lengths Base of 3600, decay of 2 would have: –3600 for 3, 1800 for 4, 900 for 5 …

33 Results

34 Summary Results QM-(120,2) didn’t help QM-(600,2) better than QM-120 –Also better than QM-600 by decreasing latency and gap rate almost the same QM-(3600,2) better than QM-120 –Also better than QM-3600 So, decay is useful for large base thresholds, but may hurt for small base thresholds

35 Summary Will always be delay –From network or OS or … Need to adjust queue latency –QM-(600,2) is the best, QM-120 almost as good Queue monitoring can be effective –35-40 ms delay, variation up to 200ms, even 80ms when quiet Run 3 Best vs. E –E: 140ms,.9 gaps/min –QM-(600,2): 68ms, 1.4 gaps/min Run 24 Best vs. I –I; 93 ms, 15 gaps/min –QM-(600,2): 90ms, 4 gaps/min QM is flexible, can be tuned to app or user

36 Future Work?

37 Future Work Compare against I-policy where threshold changes each talkspurt Compare using different metrics, say that combine latency and gaps or looks at distribution –PQ studies to measure tradeoffs Larger networks Combine with repair Other decay strategies for QM


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